'He has been a trainer for 53 years and occasionally still gallops the horses in his care.'

'He galloped his horse to the north, followed by his henchmen and Wong's group.'

'The win was the first of the year for the trainer, who owns and trains the three horses in his stable and, at 71, also gallops them.'

'I do a lot of jogging with him for three or four days after he breezes and then start galloping him because he does work so fast.'

'Alas, the wish list also contains somewhat less thrilling aspirations such as - I kid you not - riding a roller-coaster, galloping a horse across a beach and wondering at a waterfall.'

'O'Brien was galloping his horses up a really steep hill at his brother's farm when the master trainers in England had theirs out for a stroll.'

'One of my friends, Henry, who gallops horses at Laurel took me to the backside.'

'He'd never known him to gallop his horse, then leave it standing without cooling him down gently first.'

'He walks and feeds him, and even gallops him.'

'I had to gallop a white Spanish horse across the battlefield toward New Zealand's white snow-capped mountains.'

'Leota galloped in from the halfway line'

'As the Westmeath forward forced his way through for a last goal chance, he galloped up to his shoulder.'

'She frowned and squinted when she spied a figure galloping across the lush, green hills.'

'The officer went galloping out of the room, and immediately returned with a Bible and put it on my lap with great respect.'

'Fearing he had lost too much time, the lad galloped as fast as he could to the palace.'

'They then created day light when he appeared on the wing to gallop 30 yards to the corner.'

'Hawkins, gaining in confidence as the game progressed, galloped down the left and looped in a pinpoint cross for him to attack from point blank range.'

'Instantly the four girls galloped to the broken fence.'

'He was patiently waiting for her at the top of the hill, so she quickly galloped up the slope to catch up with him.'

'The advice conjures up all sorts of funny images of welly-clad officials galloping away from stick-wielding farmers at marts around the country.'

'He came galloping down the hill right away, and the three of them had their first practice right there in the woodland glen, and I was lucky enough to be the first mortal man to witness their music.'

Proceed at great speed.

'Several years ago, while teaching one of those history surveys that gallops across great events as if they were pebbles at Belmont, I asked my students to name a revolutionary.'

'The approach pays dividends in lending the film a sprightly air and making it accessible to all as it gallops through events.'

'Few people are likely to read his census, but anyone who appreciates the printed word will gallop through his new account of how it came to be.'

'galloping inflation'

'In the later scenes, it grows more formulaic, galloping towards a happy ending with unseemly haste, burdening the actors with unconvincing old age make-up and testing the audience with corny platitudes.'

'A sudden collapse of the pound could lead to equal and opposite problems, such as galloping inflation.'

'They also created a ‘revolving door’ syndrome in the sector, with sought-after staff galloping from one company to the next, on the scent of yet another lucrative pay rise.'

'The mint escaped the beds and started galloping toward the house, with the snow in summer in hot pursuit.'

'For a society that still relies very clearly on the privatised, domestic role played by the family, the extent to which women's relative equality to men has galloped ahead raises some wider questions.'

'To the fate felt in the blood and acknowledged by the intelligence is added concern for his partner as the disease gallops towards consummation.'

More definitions

1. to ride a horse at a gallop; ride at full speed: They galloped off to meet their friends.

2. to run rapidly by leaps, as a horse; go at a gallop.

3. to go fast, race, or hurry, as a person or time.
verb (used with object)

4. to cause (a horse or other animal) to gallop.
noun

5. a fast gait of the horse or other quadruped in which, in the course of each stride, all four feet are off the ground at once.

6. a run or ride at this gait.

7. a rapid rate

More examples(as adjective)

"people can be gallop about pillars."

"people can be gallop."

Origin

Early 16th century: from Old French galop (noun), galoper, variants of Old Northern French walop, waloper (see wallop).

List of Adjectives Alphabetically

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